Death Note: Re-Light, Volume 1

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All Rise...

Judge Adam Arseneau likes to drop black notebooks from rooftops, just to freak people out.

The Charge

"I'll tell you the story of a human I once knew…one who tried to
change the world and become a god."

Opening Statement

Death Note, the popular Japanese manga has sprung novelizations, three
live-action movies, and an anime series popular both at home and abroad. So what
do you do once the show finishes its run and there are no more episodes? You
recycle your content, of course!

Call Death Note: Re-Light, Volume 1 a condensation. Call it a clip
show. Call it a Japanese special brought to DVD for American fans. Call it a
dramatic new retelling of the events from the beloved Death Note anime
series from the perspective of a Death God.

I call it a waste of money.

Facts of the Case

When rogue Death God Ryuk deliberately drops his notebook in the human world,
it gets inherited by Light Yagami, teenage student. Realizing the power of the
book, which can kill any person whose name is written in its pages, Light vows
to purge the world of evildoers and rule the planet as its new god. But Light
has a nemesis in the form of L, an enigmatic detective called in to solve the
case, and who grows ever closer to determining Light's true identity.

Light and L battle to the end—but what does this all look like to
Ryuk's point of view? Now back in the land of the dead, a Death God asks Ryuk to
tell him about his time spent on Earth. Almost fondly, Ryuk recounts the tale
about a time when he wasn't bored…

The Evidence

It would be easy to single out Death Note: Re-Light as a shameless
cash grab on the part of Viz Media, but one should remember that this is not a
particularly uncommon occurrence in Japanese anime. Every anime eventually airs
a "special" (translated: clip show) episode recounting the events that
led up to current canon. Most even try to spice the proceedings up by adding
original animation and new fan service of some kind, and Death Note:
Re-Light is no exception. We get a retelling of established events from the
perspective of Ryuk, the Death God who comes to Earth and starts the whole
troublesome ball rolling by dropping his notebook off at the feet of Light,
narrating his tale to another curious Death God back in the land of the dead.
Death Note: Re-Light, Volume 1 compresses entire chapters of the story
into a lean two hours, cutting and massacring the plot in unimaginable ways,
under the guise of Ryuk "retelling" the story to another Death
God.

Where I take particular umbrage with Death Note: Re-Light is in two
specific areas: it breaks its own rules almost immediately, and it sucks. We
shall discuss both in due order.

Breaks Its Own Rules If these events are supposed to be told
from the perspective of Ryuk, then perhaps we will get some interesting insight
into the mind of the Death God, some insight into his enigmatic mind. On paper,
this is an intriguing idea, especially if we got an entirely new take on the
same sequence of events, some matter of profound revelation—except that
none of this happens. Almost immediately, we jump away to events occurring at
the police headquarters, where we know for a fact Ryuk is not, because he's with
Light in his bedroom. The entire premise of narrating events from Ryuk's
perspective, gone, kaput. It's a lie. It's a beautiful lie, but a lie all the
same. There is no insight, no observations. All we get is a clip show of events
we've already seen, or in a few extreme case, a complete abandoning of the
established narrative events, like how Light and L first meet, where Death
Note: Re-Light just starts making new crap up.

It Sucks I've reviewed condensations before. Two good examples
of how to this properly are Ghost In
The Shell: Stand Alone Complex: The Laughing Man and Ghost In The Shell: Stand Alone Complex: 2nd
Gig: Individual Eleven, which omit a significant amount of backstory, errant
plots, and character development in order to condense the primary story into a
bite-sized morsel. Yes, such DVDs are a cash grab and should be immediately
identified as such, but if care goes into the editing and in adding new footage
interjected in order to cement sequences together that previously had not been
connected, they can be useful for casual or curious fans. You can't just
randomly go cutting out things, mind you. Without meticulous cut-and-pasting,
the narrative would simply implode. That is exactly what happens here in
Death Note: Re-Light. We lose everything of importance. One minute Light
has the Death Note, the next he is screaming about being a new god and murdering
everyone in sight. Why? No time for that. Let's be honest here, people: Death
Note only survives as a narrative because of its tense, psychological
justifications, the cat-and-mouse games between Light and L, the meticulous
procedural investigation trying to catch Kira. Take away those elements, and the
show sucks. Massively sucks. Imagine watching Death Note in fast forward.
It is awful.

Death Note: Re-Light makes me sad as an anime fan. The tiny morsels
of new footage added into this feature are not even close to being worth the
price of admission. When ten-year-old kids know how to go onto the Internet and
pull all manner of manga and anime direct into their video-enabled portable
devices, Viz trying to justify charging twenty-five dollars for a clip show DVD
makes me fear for the future of the import industry in America.

In terms of technical presentation, this title is essentially a port from
previous Viz versions, with a clean but excessively soft transfer that blurs the
image, with muted earth tone palates and wishy-washy black levels. Audio is
stereo English dub and Japanese language, with moderate bass response and clear
dialogue. A surprisingly competent English dub offers a nice choice for those
who dislike the multitasking of reading and listening to things at the same
time.

In terms of supplements, we get some garbage Shonen Jump adverts, a
small (10 minute) featurette discussing the show with the Japanese cast and
crew, and three Japanese television promos—probably the most interesting
feature by default.

The Rebuttal Witnesses

Did I mention that the new animated footage is very well done? It is, really.
All 3 minutes of it. Hope you enjoyed it. It's all you're going to get on this
DVD that doesn't suck.

Closing Statement

Honestly, I can't even recommend this for diehard fans of the series. There's
nothing here worth your time. Death Note is a fantastic anime series, but
Death Note: Re-Light, Volume 1 does it no justice. It only steals your
money.